Brought together 30 years ago to be husband and wife on 'Family Ties,' they've kept a strong bond. They star on 'Naughty or Nice' on the Hallmark Channel.

Meredith Baxter recalls that when she met Michael Gross 30 years ago at the first table read for the award-winning NBC sitcom, "Family Ties," she gave the lanky actor cast as her husband a good once-over.

"I am thinking my first words to him were, 'You need a tan!,'" she said, laughing. "He is a New Yorker and I am born and raised in Los Angeles."

Three decades after that first encounter, they are playing husband and wife once again in the Hallmark Channel holiday film, "Naughty or Nice," which premieres Saturday on the cable network. The two play Carol and Walter Kringle, a pleasant couple who love the holidays so much they named their daughter Krissy (Hilarie Burton). After Krissy loses her job in an advertising company, Carol gets her a job wrapping Christmas presents at the mall.

For fans, the roles will bring back fond memories of the Keatons, the couple played by Baxter and Gross in "Family Ties." Baxter and Keaton played former hippies Elyse and Steve Keaton, still expounding liberal values in the world of Reaganomics. The series made a star out of Michael J. Fox, who played their conservative Republican son Alex. Justine Bateman played teenage daughter Mallory and Tina Yothers was youngest daughter Jennifer.

Gross was a self-described "theater snob" when he auditioned for the series. "I didn't watch prime-time television," said Gross. In fact, he had never seen Baxter in her other TV work, including the popular series "Bridget Loves Bernie" and "Family."

Baxter and Gross were the second most popular TV parents in the 1980s after Bill Cosby and Phylicia Rashad of NBC's "The Cosby Show." And both families were united so to speak when "Family Ties" followed "The Cosby Show" on NBC's popular Thursday night lineup from 1984 to '87.

Though "Family Ties" left the airwaves in 1989, the bonds Baxter and Gross nurtured remain.

"We have done [the play] 'Love Letters' many times,'" said Baxter, who was born the same day — June 21, 1947 — as her TV husband. "About seven years ago, we did a staged reading of 'You Can't Take It With You' at the Pasadena Playhouse."

Their families also socialize. "Michael and [his wife] Elza and my partner, Nancy, and I have been together on trips," said Baxter, who, like Gross, is now a grandparent.

"I didn't know it at the time but Meredith and I saw each other through some pretty prominent transitions in our lives," said Gross. "The dissolution of her marriage with David Birney on her part and me entering marriage for the first time during those 'Family Ties' years. We didn't know how important we were providing eager ears to each other and becoming confidantes."

Though each guest starred separately on Fox's ABC comedy series "Spin City" in the 1990s — Baxter actually played his mother on two episodes — Baxter and Gross recalled they hadn't been together on the small screen until "Naughty or Nice" came along.

Directing the two was a dream come true for David Mackay, who grew up watching them on "Family Ties." Gross and Baxter had not been cast when Mackay signed to do the film.

"They were just names being bantered about between myself and [executive producer] Tim Johnson," Mackay said. "The minute I came on I said you have got to get them. The concept was to have both or neither of them. They both wanted to work together, so it all went swimmingly."

Mackay not only enjoyed directing them but watching their relationship on set. "They have a great rapport and respect for each other," said Mackay. "They have fun together. In between takes and set-ups, they were hanging out and chatting it up."

"I said to Meredith, I feel like the two of us are like Neil Simon's 'The Sunshine Boys,"' said Gross. "We are two old vaudevillians who know each other so well, we can just jump in."